Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Stress high blood sugar in sick cats and its effects
By Frezoulis, P S et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2022·Southfields Veterinary Specialists, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Prevalence, association with systemic inflammatory response syndrome and outcome of stress hyperglycaemia in sick cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of sick cats was studied to see how common stress hyperglycemia (high blood sugar due to stress) is and how it affects their health. Out of 647 cats, about 30% had stress hyperglycemia, which was linked to a higher chance of developing systemic inflammatory response syndrome (a serious condition) and needing hospitalization. While the length of hospital stays was similar for both groups, cats with stress hyperglycemia had a higher risk of negative outcomes. This suggests that stress hyperglycemia can be a sign of more serious health issues in sick cats.
People also search for: cat high blood sugar symptoms · stress hyperglycemia in cats · sick cat hospitalization outcomes
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence of stress hyperglycaemia in sick cats, and to investigate the association of stress hyperglycaemia with systemic inflammatory response syndrome and outcome. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Medical records (2004 to 2013) from sick cats admitted to the Medicine Unit of a Veterinary Teaching Hospital were retrospectively reviewed. Cases were enrolled if a serum glucose measurement and a complete medical record were available. Cats that were healthy, hypoglycaemic, diabetic, sedated or had a previous administration of drugs (apart from vaccination and deworming) were excluded. RESULTS: The study included 647 cats; stress hyperglycaemia (serum glucose >8.3 mmol/L) was found in 194 (30%) cats, while 453 (70%) cats were normoglycaemic. The prevalence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome was significantly higher in cats with stress hyperglycaemia (25/174, 14.4%) compared to normoglycaemic cats (26/399, 6.5%). Significantly, more cats with stress hyperglycaemia were hospitalised [97/194 (50.0%)] compared to normoglycaemic cats [171/453 (37.7%)]. However, the median duration of hospitalisation was not significantly different [4 (1 to 26) days and 4 (1 to 24) days, respectively]. The prevalence of cats with negative outcome was not significantly different between the two groups (cats with stress hyperglycaemia: 37.1%, normoglycaemic cats: 33.9%). Nonetheless, when modelling of outcome prediction included breed, age, stress hyperglycaemia and disease category as factors, cats with stress hyperglycaemia had 2.8 times the odds to have a negative outcome (95% confidence interval: 1.3 to 6.4). CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Based on the cut-off employed in this study, Stress hyperglycaemia, as defined by the cut-off is common in sick cats. Stress hyperglycaemia is associated with systemic inflammatory response syndrome development and seem to be a negative prognostic indicator.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34796970/